An extra-long Firewall & Iceberg Podcast this week features our final "Breaking Bad" discussion for a while, looks ahead to how "The Walking Dead" will succeed it in season 2, reviews some underwhelming new HBO and ABC comedies, discusses the current state of "The Simpsons," and more. The line-up:

And as always, feel free to e-mail us at sepinwall@hitfix.com and/or dan@hitfix.com if you have questions you want answered on the show. Please put the word "podcast" in your subject line to make it easy to track them down amid the hundreds of random press releases we get every day.

Alan Sepinwall has been reviewing television since the mid-'90s, first for Tony Soprano's hometown paper, The Star-Ledger, and now for HitFix. His new book, "The Revolution Was Televised," about the last 15 years of TV drama, is for sale at Amazon. He can be reached at sepinwall@hitfix.com

I'm one of those who hated that episode because I couldn't get past the drastic rewriting of history aspect. I have liked many other episodes of recent years, though, so it's not a blanket dismissal of every 'later years' season.

When it comes to Breaking Bad's all-time status, on the one hand, you do want to let things percolate for a while before discussing Breaking Bad's position in the pantheon of great television drama, and the excitement over it being so fresh certainly might elevate it higher than it will be when we look back years down the road, but I'm truly finding it difficult to think of a television season as spectacular as this one outside of season 4 and season 3 of the Wire.

To answer your Twitter question Alan, yes, I think he did give away too much on WTF. Anyone who wondered the significance of the gun pointing at the plant and/or whether it was Walt who really poisoned Brock would hear that and speculate about what object in a familiar setting we would be shown to close the season. I assumed it would be the unused ricin cigarette in Walt's condo or something, but it amounted to the same.